Category: Women

  • The Supreme court has declared war against women and our basic rights to control our own bodies. Now is the time to fight back. Millions of people going into the streets would make it clear that without justice there can be no peace. A heroic individual has leaked to the public the decision by the Supreme Court to end abortion rights by overturning the Roe v Wade decision, and the later Casey decision.

    The post PSL Statement: Supreme Court Declares War On Women And Abortion Rights — Take To The Streets! appeared first on PopularResistance.Org.

    This post was originally published on PopularResistance.Org.

  • The US supreme court leak shows that the levers of power are pulled by those with no skin in the game, at the expense of those with an entire uterus in it

    An American girl born this week will have fewer rights than an American girl born in 1973. This is the likely import of the leaked US supreme court draft opinion on abortion rights – and cause for a huge thank-you-very-much to all those guys who suggested that women marching on Washington in January 2017 were “overreacting” to the election of Donald Trump. Please make sure to tell women again when they are being overemotional – even as they sit and watch one of Trump’s justice picks scream and sob his way through his own confirmation hearings. In the meantime, resign yourself to yet another “quirk” of the looking-glass world Trump has created. Of course – OF COURSE – women’s access to abortion would end up being restricted or removed by the deliberate decisions of a man widely imagined to have personally helped to keep the Manhattan abortion sector afloat for decades.

    I’m kidding, of course! We have absolutely no idea whether abortion services have or haven’t ever been accessed by anyone connected with a draft-avoider who described avoiding STDs in the 80s as “my personal Vietnam”. “That’s an interesting question,” Trump replied to the New York Times when asked, during the 2016 campaign, if he’d ever been involved with a woman who had undergone a termination during their relationship. “What’s your next question?”

    Continue reading…

    This post was originally published on Human rights | The Guardian.

  • Netflix documentary Jimmy Savile: A British Horror Story attempts to explain how TV celebrity Jimmy Savile’s ties to the British ruling class enabled him to get away with sexual abuse for decades, writes Alex Salmon.

    This post was originally published on Green Left.

  • Moms like Sabrina Butler-Smith, Kristine Bunch, and Michelle Murphy, who were all wrongly convicted for their children’s deaths, are calling on Texas Gov. Greg Abbott to spare Melissa Lucio’s life in a new “Moms for Melissa” PSA.

    “Melissa experienced a mother’s worst nightmare,” the video says. “Now, time is running out.”

    In 2008, Ms. Lucio was sentenced to death largely based on statements she was coerced into making during a marathon interrogation the night her 2-year-old daughter Mariah died following a tragic fall. She faces execution in one week in Texas.

    One out of seven female exonerees were accused of murdering a child who in reality died of an unrelated accident or undiagnosed pathology, according to data from the National Registry of Exonerations.

    Watch below

     

    After the tragic death of Ms. Lucio’s daughter Mariah, police rushed to judgment and erroneously concluded that the child’s death was a murder. Officers aggressively interrogated Ms. Lucio, who was pregnant and in shock from the loss of her child, for more than five hours. After asserting her innocence more than 100 times, Ms. Lucio finally acquiesced and told interrogators, “I guess I did it” and reluctantly agreed to take responsibility for some of Mariah’s injuries. Ms. Lucio is a survivor of lifelong, repeated sexual assault and domestic violence, making her even more vulnerable to falsely confessing under such coercive conditions.

    Lacking solid physical evidence, Cameron County District Attorney Armando Villalobos presented Ms. Lucio’s conciliatory statement to the jury as a “confession” to homicide and sought the death penalty.

    The PSA calling for justice for Ms. Lucio features the voices of 13 women and mothers, including Carmen Perez, president and CEO of The Gathering for Justice, actress Edie Falco, media mogul Yandy Smith-Harris, and Bob Bland of Masks for America, who describe motherhood as life’s “greatest joy.”

    The Moms for Melissa initiative joins a growing movement urging clemency for Ms. Lucio. A bipartisan coalition of more than 100 Texas lawmakers, hundreds of religious leaders and anti-domestic violence/sexual assault organizations from Texas and across the country have already written to the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles in support of clemency.

    Gov. Greg Abbott has the power to stop the state from carrying out an irreversible injustice.

     

    Take action Now

    1. Share this PSA on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram. Social media toolkit here.

    2. Follow @innocenceproject on social media to stay updated on the latest information on the case.

    3. Call Gov. Abbott today by dialing  956-446-2866 to be connected or visiting savemelissa.org

    4. Add your name to her petition by texting SAVEMELISSA to 97016.

    The post WATCH: Exoneree and Activist Moms Speak Out Against Melissa Lucio’s April 27 Execution appeared first on Innocence Project.

    This post was originally published on Innocence Project.

  • On April 16, communal clashes took place in the national capital’s Jahangirpuri area on the occasion of Hanuman Jayanti. The police arrested 23 people from two communities following the violence. “Three processions were taken out that day to mark Hanuman Jayanti, Delhi police said. Trouble broke out during the third procession, for which no permission had been granted. Those who organised it allegedly took a route next to a mosque located close to a temple,” reported NDTV. In an interview, sub-inspector Medha Lal told India TV, “Women and children were pelting stones from rooftops.”

    On April 16, several social media users (@ParwalPriyanka, @Sabhapa30724463, @Adodwaria, @PratapKeerti) shared a clip of police arresting a group of women. It has been claimed these were the women who “pelted stones”.

    Facebook pages ‘Jay Bangar page‘ and ‘The great leader modi‘ also shared this clip with a similar claim. It has gained over 39,000 views.

     

    रामनवमीं की शोभायात्रा पर पत्थर रूपी पुष्प फेंकनें वाली अप्सराओं की विदाई धूमधाम से सरकारी गाड़ी से की जा रही हैं😁😁😁
    #JayBangarBHILWARA

    Posted by Jay Bangar page on Friday, 15 April 2022

    Unrelated video

    Upon performing a reverse image search, Alt News found various posts that suggested the viral video dates back to 2020. According to a report by India Blooms News Service, the video is from UP’s Muradabad and was shot during COVID-19 lockdown.

    The video description reads, “A team of doctors and medical staffers were attacked in Uttar Pradesh’s Moradabad town when they were visiting the area to escort the primary contacts of a COVID-19 positive patient, who died, to a quarantine facility on Wednesday.”

    The viral portion beings from the 25-second mark.

    At the 47-second mark, a medical professional dressed in a PPE kit told India Blooms News Service, “We were thrashed… they surrounded us. We had to run for our lives…. [another medical professional can be heard saying “We don’t want to do such jobs”]… we weren’t given any security…. only four police officials were there as opposed to the public who were in thousands…”

    India Today and The Hindu also reported the incident. Amit Pathak, Senior Superintendent of Police, Moradabad, told the media that a crowd of around 150 people attacked the ambulance when a medical team was taking the family of the deceased for quarantine.

    Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath issued a statement stating that the National Security Act and the National Disaster Act, 2005 would be invoked against miscreants in such cases and any loss to the public property would be recovered from them.

    To sum it up, a clip from 2020 was shared with the claim that it is related to recent communal violence in Delhi.

    The post Old video falsely shared as police arresting Muslim women after Jahangirpuri violence appeared first on Alt News.


    This content originally appeared on Alt News and was authored by Archit Mehta.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • Pooja Gurjar is a young woman from Rajasthan. She was married off at the age of 16 years and sent to her marital home. At her insistence, she returned to live in her parents’ house and is has continued her education. She recently completed MJAS’ Grassroots Journalism course and wants to build her career in …Read More

    This post was originally published on American Jewish World Service – AJWS.

  • Gillian Dalley and Dr Jane Hamlin respond to an article by Zoe Williams, and Jacqueline Darby reacts to a piece by Susanna Rustin. Plus Prof Martin Marshall on the ban on conversion therapy

    Women have fought against prejudice and discrimination on grounds of their sex status for generations. In this country, the equality legislation that exists now is largely a result of that struggle, or has been stimulated by its example. But women’s struggle is not over. They still suffer unfairly on account of their sex status, and the demands that are now being made to soften their struggle by relaxing rights to single-sex spaces are but one example of this injustice.

    Women are still at risk from male strangers, and they constitute the population group most often murdered or coerced by male partners. It is men, in these situations, who are the problem and who, as a population group, should bear the burden of searching for, and living with, the solutions.

    Continue reading…

    This post was originally published on Human rights | The Guardian.

  • Suzanne James spoke to Angela Carr, Socialist Alliance candidate for the Senate in Victoria, about housing, health, National Disability Insurance Scheme and the party’s plans to address the growing socio-economic inequality crisis.

    This post was originally published on Green Left.

  • Earlier this week, a group of Texas lawmakers from across the political spectrum visited Melissa Lucio in prison, where she is on death row and is scheduled to be executed on April 27.

    Co-Chairs of the Texas House’s bipartisan Criminal Justice Reform Caucus, Reps. Jeff Leach (R) and Joe Moody (D) led fellow representatives Lacey Hull, Victoria Criado, Rafael Anchia, Toni Rose, and James White to the Mountain View Unit in Gatesville, Texas, where the state houses women on death row.

    “We are blessed to have the opportunity to meet with Melissa, to pray with her, to spend time with her and we’re more resolute and committed than ever to fighting over the next three weeks to save her life,” said Rep. Leach.

     

    Ms. Lucio was wrongfully convicted and sentenced to death after her 2-year-old daughter, Mariah, died in 2007 following an accidental fall down a staircase when the family was moving homes. 

    Ms. Lucio was immediately taken into custody by the police and aggressively questioned for hours. Although she asserted her innocence more than 100 times, police interrogated her for five hours two hours after her daughter died. Around 3 a.m., Ms. Lucio, exhausted and in shock from the loss of her child, agreed, falsely, to take responsibility for some of Mariah’s injuries. Ms. Lucio, a life-long survivor of abuse, succumbed to the detectives’ demands to bring the nightmarish interrogation to an end. 

    The abuse Ms. Lucio suffered throughout her life made her especially vulnerable to the police’s coercive interrogation tactics. But her defense was not allowed to present any of this evidence at trial. Her attorney failed to mount a proper defense or present evidence pointing to her innocence. 

     

    There are so many doubts around Ms. Lucio’s case, and others are starting to take note. Last month, a bipartisan group of 83 Texas House members, spearheaded by Rep. Leach and Rep. Moody, sent the state’s Board of Pardons and Paroles and Gov. Greg Abbott a letter asking them to stop the execution of Ms. Lucio by granting her a reprieve or commuting her sentence. Johnny Galvan Jr., a juror in Ms. Lucio’s trial, expressed his regret for voting for Ms. Lucio to receive the death sentence in a Houston Chronicle op-ed published on April 3.

    The seven Texas lawmakers toured the prison and then met with Ms. Lucio for 40 minutes where they all came together and prayed. In a tweet, Rep. Moody said, “She prayed with us & hugged us; today might be the last genuine human contact she has before the state kills her.”

    The post Texas Lawmakers Pray With Melissa Lucio on Death Row appeared first on Innocence Project.

    This post was originally published on Innocence Project.

  • The recently released 2021 National Student Safety Survey shows that sexual harassment and assault is widespread on university campuses. Sarah Hathway reports.

    This post was originally published on Green Left.

  • The Republican Party is spearheading a reactionary drive against the hard-won gains of the women’s liberation and LGBTI rights movements, reports Barry Sheppard.

    This post was originally published on Green Left.

  • Happening shows the importance of legal abortion through the experience of a young woman forced into backyard abortion in early 1960s France. Barry Healy reviews.

    This post was originally published on Green Left.

  • Viktorya Kokoreva speaks with Russian feminist activist and historian Ella Rossman from Feminist Anti-war Resistance about the challenges this new movement faces.

    This post was originally published on Green Left.

  • Five hundred people called on Prime Minister Scott Morrison to implement changes to stop gendered and domestic violence against women. Niko Leka reports.

    This post was originally published on Green Left.

  • Lourdes Screen shot 3Lourdes Portillo, International Filmmaker Interviewing Lourdes Portillo was a great pleasure. We are very old friends and played an important role in each other’s lives as co-directors of the prize winning film “After the Earthquake / Despues del terremoto.” Over the years we have kept in contact, with some lapses that lasted years. I wanted […]

    This post was originally published on Estuary Press.

  • On International Women’s Day, members of the official Lao Women’s Union say that women in the Southeast Asian country still lack equality and suffer significant exploitation, violence and human trafficking — especially those who are recruited to work in a Chinese-run special economic zone.

    Poverty has driven many to seek purportedly well-paying jobs in the Golden Triangle Special Economic Zone in northern Laos’ Bokeo Province. Dominated by the Chinese-owned Kings Romans Casino, the SEZ is notorious for illegal drug activity and human and wildlife trafficking.

    Businesses operating in the SEZ recruit Lao women to work as barmaids or “chat girls” who text casino customers over web applications like Line, WhatsApp and Facebook Messenger, promising them healthy rates of return if they invest in the company. They often have ambitious sales quotas that are difficult if not impossible to meet while they pile up “debts” for food and housing.

    “Many of our women and girls are exploited, abused and victimized by human trafficking,” said a member of the Lao Women’s Union of Nomo district in neighboring Oudomxay province. “They’re from poor families, uneducated, unaware of the risk, and sold.”

    When the women cannot pay their debt, they are forced into prostitution and held against their will by their employers, who know that local authorities cannot easily enter the Chinese-run zone, which operates largely beyond the reach of the Lao government. The employers also have used the COVID-19 pandemic as an excuse to hold the women, even though they tested negative for the virus or had been vaccinated.

    “During the last two years, or during the COVID-19 pandemic, many Laotians have lost their jobs, and in the last five months, hundreds of them, especially women, have been attracted by online ads about well-paying jobs with free food and free accommodations at the Golden Triangle SEZ and decided to take the jobs,” said a member of the central government-level Lao Women’s Federation.

    “In reality, it’s the opposite, and many of the women are forced to sell sex,” she said. “So far, at least 19 women have been rescued from the SEZ.”

    Members of a special provincial task force were able to rescue the women earlier this year only after they formally requested authorities’ help and could prove their identities.

    But hundreds of others remained trapped by their employers in the SEZ and are still trying to get out, though they have request help from Lao authorities, according to women who got out.

    “Wanted! Good-looking girls”

    A 22-year-old from Luang Prabang province who is among the women trapped in the SEZ told RFA that she and her younger sister responded in November 2021 to an online ad that said, “Wanted! good-looking girls and women, 18-35 years old, able to speak Chinese, Lao, Thai and English, can earn up to 5,000 yuan (U.S. $767) a month.”

    They initially were hired that month as online chat girls at the SEZ, but when they could not perform their job duties, they were “sold” two weeks later to a brothel, she said.

    “Besides us, many other Lao women have also been lied to,” said the women who declined to provide her name for safety reasons. “All of us have been requesting help or to be rescued from the authorities for weeks since Feb. 9.”

    The woman said she contacted members of Bokeo province’s special task force on Facebook multiple times, leaving her phone number and messages asking them to call.

    “They never did,” she said. “Now, we’re still waiting.”

    “Since I first contacted the authorities, more than 30 other women in the Golden Triangle SEZ have come up to me and asked me how to get help,” said the women. “I gave them the contact numbers. So far, none of us have been helped. We’ve lost all hope for the rescue from the authorities”

    The woman also said that she and her sister have no money to buy food. She called her mother to tell her that the authorities had not responded to her request for help, but her mother didn’t know what to do.

    “Both of us cried,” the woman said. “She just told me to be patient and just listen to the employer. How can I listen to my employer? He’s forcing us to do this [work as prostitutes].”

    “If we refuse to serve customers, we’ll be scolded,” she said. “We don’t deserve to do this kind of job. We’re forced to do it every day and every night, even when we have menstrual periods or are sick.”

    ‘Just work to pay back debt’

    A 26-year old from Xayaburi province who has been trapped in the SEZ for more than three months along with her 23-year-old sister said she contacted the authorities countless times because they wanted to leave and return to their home.

    “We can’t stay here any longer because the longer we stay, the more debt we owe,” she said. “We can’t do anything or go anywhere. For example, if we go out to buy food, we’ll be fined. If we stay, we won’t make any money. We’ll just work to pay back debt.”

    When the woman, who owes her employer 16,400 yuan (U.S. $2,516), asked where the debt came from, she was told that it stemmed from COVID-19 tests and blood tests.

    Her sister told RFA that she has been confined to her room several times after she went out to buy food.

    “The employer said that I was trying to escape,” she said.

    When RFA contacted Bokeo province’s special task force in late February about women still trapped inside the SEZ who wanted to leave, an official said to give him their phone numbers. He also said to provide the women with his phone number so they could call for help.

    When RFA called the police department in Bokeo’s Tonpheung district, where the SEZ is located, an officer said to give the trapped women the department’s phone number and that officers would instruct them as to what to do.

    “Our district has a specific task force whose job is to help those women,” said a member of the Lao Women’s Union of Tonpheung district.

    “I’m going to call the team right now and ask them to call the women.”

    Reported by RFA’s Lao Service. Translated by Max Avary. Written in English by Roseanne Gerin.


    This content originally appeared on Radio Free Asia and was authored by Radio Free Asia.

    This post was originally published on Radio Free.

  • A new ACTU report, released just before International Women’s Day, is a timely reminder of just how little respect the Coalition government has for the majority of women. Isaac Nellist reports.

    This post was originally published on Green Left.

  • 7 Mins Read International Women’s Day is internationally recognised on the March 8th every year, and represents a focal point for women’s rights and is a celebration of the social, economic, cultural and political achievements of women. At times, it appears as though global environmental and social crises are too overwhelmingly large to tackle. But there are some […]

    The post #IWD2022: 10 Women Changing The Future Of Impact In Asia appeared first on Green Queen.

    This post was originally published on Green Queen.

  • A well-supported action against gendered violence and sexual assault was organised by the Geelong Women Unionist Network. Zeta Henderson reports.

    This post was originally published on Green Left.

  • In our work through Friendship of Women Inc., we connect every day with women in Cameron County who need help dealing with domestic abuse. We strive to support these women and their families, as well as to educate government officials about the facts and realities of domestic violence based on research.

    Melissa Lucio, who faces execution in Texas on April 27, is a survivor of child sexual abuse and relentless domestic abuse. She never received the help she needed. Melissa’s case illustrates the vital role played by organizations like ours; if only someone had referred her to outreach agencies or we had known about her situation when there was still an opportunity to help, we doubt she would be on death row today.

    From what we have learned about Melissa’s case, the evidence is overwhelming that her young daughter’s death was a tragic accident, the result of a fall down the stairs, not a crime. Melissa is a victim, not a murderer. Melissa has not properly grieved the loss of her child.

    Melissa had multiple childhood adversities that led to cumulative traumas throughout her life. Her stepfather and uncle began raping her when she was just 6 years old. She became a child bride at 16 to escape the terrors of home, but the marriage was no refuge. Her husband abused her for many years, had his own addiction problem, and dealt drugs. After he abandoned her with five small children, her next partner was no different, the abuse continued both physically and emotionally. By the time she was 35, Melissa was struggling with abuse, mental illness, addiction and poverty. She had given birth to 12 children and suffered multiple miscarriages.

    While law enforcement and child protective services were often contacted because of the violence inflicted by Melissa’s partners, Melissa never received the support or treatment she needed. Multiple systems failed her and her family. At times the family was homeless or living in deplorable conditions. And yet, thousands of pages of Child Protective Services Records show that Melissa’s 12 children never said that she was violent with them.

    The state of Texas has continued the cycle of victimization by wrongfully convicting Melissa of capital murder and sentencing her to death. Melissa’s conviction turned on a so-called confession that was obtained after a lengthy and coercive interrogation. Melissa repeatedly told the officers that she did not kill her daughter, but they continued to threaten her, using techniques that are notorious for producing false confessions, particularly when applied to a trauma survivor like Melissa. Eventually, she acquiesced, saying “I guess I did it.”

    What happened to Melissa Lucio is distressingly common. According to the Innocence Project and the Innocence Network, a substantial percentage of women who have been wrongfully convicted of killing a child were coerced into falsely confessing. Of the 67 women listed on the National Registry of Exonerations who were exonerated after a murder conviction, more than a quarter involved false confessions, and nearly a third involved child victims.

    “Melissa repeatedly told the officers that she did not kill her daughter.”

    Moreover, in the nearly 15 years since Melissa was arrested and interrogated, research on domestic violence has evolved considerably. We have little doubt that Melissa’s case would be handled differently today based on current literature showing how domestic abuse survivors use coping skills.

    In fact, even at the time of Melissa’s trial, a psychologist was available to explain to the jury why Melissa’s history of abuse made her vulnerable to the officers” interrogation tactics, but the trial court refused to admit the testimony. In 2019, a unanimous three-judge panel of the Fifth Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals ruled that Melissa should get a new trial because she was denied the opportunity to present a defense. They recognized that providing an explanation for her incriminating statements during the interrogation would have been the most significant evidence in the case, given the absence of any physical evidence or witness testimony establishing that Melissa had abused any of her children, let alone killed her toddler. When Texas appealed, the en banc Fifth Circuit — split 10 to 7 – overturned that decision. Incredibly, three of the 10 judges in the majority said the exclusion of the psychologist’s testimony was “the key evidentiary ruling in the case,” and Melissa’s case was “a clear example that justice to a defendant” is not available under today’s procedures.

    It would be unconscionable for Melissa to be executed despite the significant evidence that her child’s death was not a crime, and she was denied the right to present a defense. At the very least, Melissa’s case should be reexamined in light of our current understanding of domestic violence. We hope that the Cameron County district attorney will reconsider and withdraw Melissa’s execution date, or that a court will intervene.

    Gloria Ocampo is executive director and CEO of Friendship of Women Inc., in Brownsville, Nora Montalvo-Liendo, an associate professor at Texas A&M University and conducts research on violence against women. 

    Published in Brownsville Herald on Feb. 10, 2022

    The post Friendship of Women Leaders Op-Ed in Texas Brownsville Herald: Do Not Execution Lucio appeared first on Innocence Project.

    This post was originally published on Innocence Project.

  • Women, particularly those in the Third World, often find themselves with limited ability to participate in community organizations and political life because of the bondage poverty and their traditional sex role imposes on them. On them falls sole responsibility to care for their children and other family members, especially when sick; they maintain the home, cook the meals, wash the dishes, the clothes, bathe the children, clean the house, mend the clothes. This labor becomes unending manual labor when households have no electricity (consequently, no lights, no refrigerator, no labor-saving electrical devices), and no running water. The burden of this work impedes the social participation, self-expectations, and education of the female population.

    The post Gains Of Nicaraguan Women During The Second Sandinista Government appeared first on PopularResistance.Org.

    This post was originally published on PopularResistance.Org.

  • As a 14-year-old Australian, I urge you to stand in solidarity with me against policymakers in France and India, where they are oppressing Muslim women

    This morning as I was intricately pinning my school hijab around my head, I was thinking of how privileged I am to be able to wear my hijab to school. But it shouldn’t be a privilege, it is my right. It shouldn’t be something that Muslim women everywhere have to continue to fight for day after day. I feel for my hijabi sisters all around the world. What would I do if I had to choose between getting an education and wearing my hijab?

    Recently, a young Muslim student wearing a hijab in the Indian state of Karnataka was taunted by a mob of male anti-Muslim protesters. Watching the footage, I felt disgusted and scared, seeing a young hijabi woman like myself being assaulted, while doing absolutely nothing wrong. Simply trying to get an education. Just last week, shockingly close to home, a hijabi high school student in New Zealand was filmed as other school students forcibly removed her hijab and proceeded to share the video of the taunting on social media. The hijab these women wear is demonised by many in their communities, countries, and unfortunately all around the world. This Islamophobia is devastating, but unfortunately, Muslim women being the subject of hatred and abuse is nothing new.

    Continue reading…

    This post was originally published on Human rights | The Guardian.

  • A new documentary film, The Other Side Of The River, shows the complexity of the women’s revolution in Rojava and its contradictions. Firat News Agency spoke to director Antonia Kilian about the film.

    This post was originally published on Green Left.

  • Grace Tame and Brittany Higgins were widely praised for using their addresses to highlight politicians’ hypocrisy. Sue Bull argues we need action not words.

    This post was originally published on Green Left.

  • In 2008, Melissa Lucio was sentenced to death in Texas for the murder of her 2-year old daughter Mariah, who died two days after a tragic fall down a flight of stairs. In shock and grieving the loss of her baby — the youngest of her 12 children at the time — Ms. Lucio was taken into police custody and immediately blamed for her daughter’s death. 

    Last month, the State of Texas scheduled Ms. Lucio’s execution for April 27, for a crime that never occurred. On Feb. 8, attorneys for Ms. Lucio filed a motion to withdraw or modify her looming execution date, but Ms. Lucio’s life is still in jeopardy.

    Read and share these key facts before Texas makes the irreversible mistake of killing an innocent woman. 

    1. Mariah’s death was a tragic accident not a murder. 

    Mariah fell down a flight of stairs while the family was moving homes on Feb. 15, 2007. The toddler had a mild physical disability that made her unstable while walking and prone to tripping. Two days later, she took a nap and didn’t wake up.

    Instead of taking the steps to learn about Mariah’s health history and investigating the causes of her injuries, authorities immediately jumped to the conclusion that she had been murdered and, through a coercive interrogation, pressured Ms. Lucio to make a false statement.

    Nearly 1 in 3 exonerated women were wrongly convicted of harming children or other loved ones in their care and nearly 70% were wrongly convicted of crimes that never took place at all — events that were accidents, deaths by suicide, or fabricated — according to data from the National Registry of Exonerations.

    2. Melissa has maintained her innocence for 14 years. 

    Ms. Lucio has maintained her innocence on death row for more than 14 years. Mariah had fallen before this tragic accident and appeared uninjured after the fall. Ms. Lucio repeatedly said she did not harm Mariah during the interrogation until coerced by police officers.

    3. The state presented no evidence that Melissa abused any of her children.

    Thousands of pages of Child Protective Services records show that Ms. Lucio’s 12 children never said she was violent with them. No physical evidence showed otherwise.

    “The State presented no physical evidence or witness testimony establishing that Lucio abused Mariah or any of her children, let alone killed Mariah,” Judge Catharina Haynes wrote on behalf of the seven dissenting judges from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit. 

    “The jury was deprived of key evidence to weigh: that is the point.”

    Ms. Lucio struggled at times to provide for her family, but was a caring mother, who did her best given her incredibly difficult circumstances.

    4. Melissa is a survivor of a lifetime of sexual abuse and domestic violence.

    Ms. Lucio is a survivor of life-long, repeated sexual assault and domestic violence. She was sexually abused by a family member beginning at the age of 6.

    Ms. Lucio endured abuse throughout her childhood and into her teenage years. At 16, she became a child bride to escape. However, Ms. Lucio’s husband perpetuated the cycle of abuse. Still a minor and unable to leave the abusive marriage, Ms. Lucio was trapped and developed a substance use problem. Her husband later abandoned her and their five children.

    Ms. Lucio had nine children, including Mariah, with her next partner, who was also abusive, repeatedly raped her, and threatened to kill her.

    5. Melissa was coerced by police the same night her daughter died.

    Detectives jumped to judgment and just two hours after Mariah died, took Ms. Lucio in for questioning. During the interrogation, officers berated and intimidated Ms. Lucio, who was pregnant and in shock from the loss of her child, for five hours. Research has shown that survivors of sexual abuse and violence, like Ms. Lucio, are more vulnerable to falsely confessing under such coercive conditions.

    Ms. Lucio repeatedly maintained her innocence during the interrogation. But officers continued to interrogate and intimidate her, only stopping when she gave in to their demands saying, “I guess I did it,” at 3 a.m. to get them to end the interrogation.

    6. The jury did not hear Melissa’s defense. 

    The jury never learned about the extent of Ms. Lucio’s history of child sexual abuse and domestic violence and how it shaped her reactions immediately following her daughter’s death. The trial court prohibited this testimony but allowed the Texas Ranger who coerced Ms. Lucio’s incriminating statement to testify for the prosecution that Ms. Lucio’s slumped posture, passivity, and failure to make eye contact told him that she was guilty. 

    Without that context, the jury convicted Ms. Lucio’s of capital murder based on her statement and the Texas Ranger’s testimony about her distant behavior during the interrogation.

    The omission of this crucial evidence was particularly damaging because the prosecution had a weak case for capital murder, and an even weaker case for a death sentence. Ms. Lucio had no prior record of violence.

     

    7. Cameron County D.A. Armando Villalobos was running for re-election and seeking a “win.” He is now serving a 13-year federal prison sentence for bribery and extortion.

    Lacking solid physical evidence, Cameron County District Attorney Armando Villalobos presented Ms. Lucio’s conciliatory statement to the jury as a “confession” to homicide and sought the death penalty, a “win” he thought would help him get re-elected. Today, the former district attorney is serving a 13-year federal prison sentence for bribery and extortion.

    8. Melissa’s wrongful conviction has torn her family apart.

    Ms. Lucio, who has 14 children, has suffered a grave injustice. Her children, who ranged from 2 to 15 at the time of her arrest, were still in the precious moments of growing up when the death of their sister and their mother’s wrongful incarceration devastated them. Ms. Lucio gave birth to her youngest children — twin boys — while in jail and had to give them up for adoption due to her wrongful incarceration. The rest of her children were split up and sent to live with relatives or placed in the custody of the state. 

    “Texas tore this family apart through the cruelty and injustice of Ms. Lucio’s wrongful conviction. Her children, mother, and siblings have been traumatized by Ms. Lucio’s arrest, prosecution, and death sentence,” said Tivon Schardl, chief of the Capital Habeas Unit of the Federal Defender for the Western District of Texas, and one of Ms. Lucio’s attorneys. 

    The criminal legal system failed her and her family, and if it executes her, it will continue to do so.

    9. Speak out before Texas makes an irreversible mistake — time is running out. 

    The Cameron County’s new district attorney, the courts, the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles, and Gov. Abbott must undertake a meaningful review of Ms. Lucio’s innocence claim, the coercive tactics used in her interrogation, and the tragic circumstances of Mariah’s accidental death, before an irreversible injustice occurs.

    1. Add your name to stop the execution.
    2. Make sure everyone on Twitter knows her name: Tweet now
    3. Use this social media toolkit to spread the word on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.

    The post Melissa Lucio: 9 Facts You Should Know About This Innocent Woman Facing Execution appeared first on Innocence Project.

    This post was originally published on Innocence Project.

  • (Brownsville, Texas) Attorneys for Melissa Lucio today filed a motion to withdraw or modify her April 27, 2022 execution date. The filing in the 138th Judicial District Court of Cameron County asserts that Melissa was wrongfully convicted and sentenced to death for the accidental death of her two-year-old daughter, Mariah. Melissa, a Mexican-American from the Rio Grande Valley, is on death row despite forensic and eyewitness evidence that her daughter died from a head injury she suffered in a fall. Mariah’s death was a tragic accident, not a murder.

    “Police immediately jumped to the conclusion that Mariah had been murdered and never considered medical and scientific evidence that could have established Mariah died after an accidental fall,” said Vanessa Potkin, Director of Special Litigation at the Innocence Project, and one of Melissa’s attorneys. “While pregnant with twins, Melissa was subjected to a five-hour, late-night and aggressive interrogation until, physically and emotionally exhausted, she agreed to say, ‘I guess I did it.’ Melissa suffered a lifetime of sexual abuse — starting when she was only six years old — and domestic violence, which made her especially vulnerable to the police’s coercive interrogation tactics.”

    “Texas tore this family apart through the cruelty and injustice of Melissa’s wrongful conviction. Her children, mother, and siblings have been traumatized by Melissa’s arrest, prosecution, and death sentence. The State’s rush to set an execution date where there exists a strong innocence claim is alarming,” said Tivon Schardl, Chief of the Capital Habeas Unit of the Federal Defender for the Western District of Texas, and one of Melissa’s attorneys. “The State is also ignoring Melissa’s right to exercise her Roman Catholic faith and pending litigation in the United States Supreme Court that directly implicates this right.”

    “There is too much doubt to execute Melissa Lucio. Too many questions remain about the results of the autopsy, the conduct of interrogators, prosecutors, and courts, and Melissa’s mental impairments,” said Potkin. “Withdrawing the execution date so that the District Attorney, the courts, the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles, and the Governor can undertake a meaningful review of Melissa’s innocence case, the coercive tactics used in her interrogation, and her lifetime of sexual abuse and domestic violence is the common-sense position and imperative as a matter of basic fairness.”

    Melissa Lucio’s Motion to Reconsider State’s Motion to Set Execution Date and to Withdraw or Modify the Execution Date can be viewed here and Exhibits can be viewed: here.

     

    Melissa’s lifetime of abuse made her especially vulnerable to coercive interrogation tactics that resulted in a false “confession.”

    On February 15, 2007, as Melissa was moving her family to a new apartment, her two-year-old daughter Mariah fell down a steep flight of outdoor stairs which led to their apartment. Mariah had a mild physical disability that made her unstable when walking. She had fallen before. Mariah appeared uninjured after the fall, but two days later, she went down for a nap and did not wake up. (Motion at pp. 6-7.)

    Within hours of losing her daughter, grieving, numb with shock, and pregnant with twins, Melissa was hauled into an interrogation room where armed, male police officers stood over her, yelled and berated her, and accused her of causing her daughter’s death.

    Melissa repeatedly told the police that she did not kill her daughter. But the officers continued to threaten her and used coercive interrogation techniques that are notorious for their tendency to produce false confessions, particularly when applied to vulnerable people like Melissa who suffer from trauma. (Motion at pp. 8-11.)

    After over five hours of interrogation, Melissa was emotionally and physically exhausted. In response to a Texas Ranger’s repeated demands, Melissa finally acquiesced and said, “I guess I did it.” (Motion at p. 8.)

    At the time of her arrest, Melissa had no record of violence. Thousands of pages of protective service records and recorded interviews with her children—including visits with the children shortly before and immediately after Mariah’s death—show that Melissa was not abusive. (Motion at p. 30.)

    Melissa’s conviction is based on two of the leading causes of wrongful convictions of women: false admissions made during police interrogation and faulty forensic evidence.  Approximately 40% of exonerated women were wrongly convicted of harming children or other loved ones in their care and nearly 70% were wrongfully convicted of crimes that never took place at all — events that were accidents, deaths by suicide, and fabricated — according to data from the National Registry of Exonerations.

     

    Melissa was especially vulnerable to the aggressive, intimidating, and psychological interrogation tactics of the police and male authority figures.

    When Melissa was just six, two adult male relatives began sexually abusing her, preying on her when her mother was not home. (Motion at p. 4.) As a young teenager, she was raped again.

    At age 16, Melissa got married as a child bride. Although this marriage would otherwise be against the law in Texas, it was permitted because Melissa’s mother gave consent. Melissa’s first husband was a violent alcoholic and drug dealer. He abandoned Melissa after she gave birth to their five children. (Motion at p. 5.)

    Melissa’s next partner continued the cycle of violence and abuse. She had seven children by her second husband. He beat Melissa, choked her, repeatedly raped her, and threatened to kill her. The family sunk deeper into poverty and was intermittently homeless. (Motion at pp. 5-6.) By the time Melissa was 35, she was struggling with physical abuse, PTSD, addiction, and poverty. She had given birth to 12 children and suffered multiple miscarriages.

    These experiences, and years of supervision by protective services—for her inability to provide for the children, never abuse—left Melissa weak and obliging in the face of authority figures and aggressive men. A Texas Ranger recklessly exploited Melissa’s vulnerabilities, first being soothing, then angry, taking down her hair, then pushing her to copy his demonstration of physical abuse. (Motion at p. 10.)

     

    “The State presented no physical evidence or witness testimony establishing that [Melissa] abused Mariah or any of her children, let alone killed Mariah,” seven Fifth Circuit judges wrote. (Motion at pp. 18-19)

    But in 2008, Cameron County District Attorney Armando Villalobos was seeking reelection and decided to prosecute Melissa for capital murder. Lacking any physical evidence or eyewitness linking Melissa to Mariah’s death, DA Villalobos’ team characterized Melissa’s acquiescence during the coercive interrogation as a “confession.” DA Villalobos was corrupt: he is now serving a 13-year federal prison sentence for bribery and extortion.

    At Melissa’s capital trial, Melissa’s attorneys tried to present expert witnesses who could have explained that Melissa’s response to the Ranger showed the results of her traumatic experiences, not guilt. The DA objected, and the trial court ruled that this evidence was “irrelevant.” That ruling deprived Melissa of the only means she had of explaining why she took responsibility although Mariah’s death was an accident. (Motion at pp. 12-16.)

    The trial court prohibited this testimony but allowed the Texas Ranger who coerced Melissa’s incriminating statement to testify for the prosecution that Melissa’s slumped posture, passivity, and failure to make eye contact told him that she was guilty. (Motion at pp. 11-12.)

     

    The jury did not hear Melissa’s defense or mitigating factorsMelissa’s trial attorneys were not prepared for the penalty phase of the trial. Lead counsel hamstrung his mitigation specialist and expert until weeks before the trial began. As a result, Melissa’s mitigation specialist never completed her investigation and the jury never learned about the extent of Melissa’s history of child sexual abuse and domestic violence.

    The jury never heard how Melissa’s history of trauma and abuse shaped her reactions immediately following her daughter’s death. Without that context, the jury convicted Melissa of capital murder. By contrast, Melissa’s partner, Mariah’s father, was sentenced to four years for endangering a child.

    The omission of this mitigating evidence was particularly damaging because the prosecution had a weak case for death. Melissa had no prior record of violence and the State’s sole evidence of future dangerousness was the death of Mariah and a prior conviction for driving under the influence.

     

    So far, the courts’ hands have been tied.

    A majority of judges have agreed that the exclusion of the psychologist’s expert testimony, which would have provided an explanation for Melissa’s acquiescence during the coercive interrogation, was wrong, but decided that current federal law limits the courts’ ability to intervene. (Motion at pp. 18-19.)

    A panel of federal judges on the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals held that Melissa was denied her constitutional right to present a meaningful defense. In a unanimous three-judge opinion, the court ruled that providing an explanation for her incriminating statements during the interrogation, which she was not permitted to do, was the most significant evidence in the case since there was no physical evidence or witness testimony establishing that Melissa abused Mariah or any of her children, let alone killed Mariah.

    Texas appealed to the full 17-member Fifth Circuit. Ten of 17 judges agreed that the exclusion of the psychologist’s testimony skewed the evidence against Melissa, but three of the 10 joined seven other judges in holding that the Anti-Terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (AEDPA) — a law that has been widely criticized for unfairly curtailing review, including of innocent people — barred relief for Melissa. Seven judges dissented from the opinion denying relief for Melissa with four writing separate dissenting opinions to express their outrage. (Motion at pp. 18-19.)

    The motion provides further grounds for withdrawing or modifying Melissa’s execution date, including the need for additional state court proceedings on her actual innocence, intellectual disability, newly-discovered false testimony, and testimony based on “junk science;” the COVID pandemic has created obstacles to preparing claims and present a threat to the health of people who may attend the execution; the execution date does not allow Melissa a fair opportunity to present her case for clemency; ongoing litigation before the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights; and ongoing litigation challenging Texas Department of Criminal Justice rules that do not allow a prisoner to have their spiritual advisor pray audibly or lay hands on them in the execution chamber, thus violating their religious liberty. (Motion at pp. 2-3.)

     

    A meaningful review of Melissa’s innocence case is needed before an irreversible injustice occurs.

    A broad, diverse, and growing coalition, including the Innocence Network, Cornell Law School Center on the Death Penalty Worldwide, domestic violence and battered women’s organizations, former prosecutors, experts in gender-based violence, and law professors have expressed support for Melissa and have stated that, as a survivor of sexual abuse and domestic violence, she was especially susceptible to making a false confession or incriminating remarks during a coercive interrogation.

    According to the Death Penalty Information Center, since 1973, 186 people have been exonerated from death row, including 16 in Texas, and the number of people whose lives were taken before they were able to prove their innocence is unknown.

     

    The post New Filing: Melissa Lucio, Who Suffered a Lifetime of Abuse, is Innocent and Her Execution Date Should be Withdrawn appeared first on Innocence Project.

    This post was originally published on Innocence Project.

  • Melisssa Lucio, a Mexican-American, is facing execution on April 27, 2022, in Texas for the murder of her 2-year-old daughter Mariah — a crime that never occurred. Mariah died two days after accidentally falling down a steep flight of stairs and Melissa has maintained her innocence on death row for more than 14 years. Take action now by reposting the social media materials below.

    Save Melissa Lucio

     

    • Hashtag: #SaveMelissaLucio
    • URL: SaveMelissa.Org
    • Petition link is here.
    • Twitter copy or retweet here: Melissa Lucio is facing execution on April 27 for a crime that never occurred. I am joining @innocence in preventing an irreversible injustice before it’s too late. Add your name to #SaveMelissaLucio https://bit.ly/3IIP03V
    • Facebook copy or repost here: Melissa Lucio faces execution on April 27 Texas for a crime that never occurred. Add your name now to prevent an irreversible injustice. https://bit.ly/35FDmbG
    • Instagram
      • Repost here: Melissa Lucio has maintained her innocence on death row in Texas for more than 14 years, yet she is set to be executed on April 27, 2022, for the murder of her 2-year-old daughter Mariah.⁠
      • Download images formatted for Instagram post & Instagram Stories here.
      • Download text graphics formatted for Instagram Post & Instagram Stories here.

    Suggested language for Instagram: 

    Melissa Lucio, a Mexican-American, is facing execution on April 27, 2022, in Texas for the murder of her 2-year-old daughter Mariah — a crime that never occurred. Mariah died two days after accidentally falling down a steep flight of stairs and Melissa has maintained her innocence on death row for more than 14 years.

    But Mariah wasn’t murdered. She tragically died after an accidental fall down steep stairs, and Melissa, like nearly 70% of exonerated women, has been convicted of a crime that never took place (events that were actually accidents, deaths by suicide, or fabricated).⁠

    ⁠Melissa is a survivor of sexual abuse and violence that she has endured her whole life beginning at age 6. Her history of abuse makes her especially vulnerable to coercive tactics and falsely confessing. On the night her youngest child died, she was interrogated and intimidated for five hours, until she finally said, “I guess I did it,” to get detectives to end the interrogation. ⁠

    ⁠Melissa was a mother of 12 when she was arrested. She was also pregnant with twins she gave birth to in jail and had to give up for adoption. The State of Texas presented no physical evidence establishing that Melissa ever abused Mariah or any of her children. In fact, thousands of pages of Child Protective Services records show her kids never said she was violent with them.⁠⁠

    We have less than 80 days to #SaveMelissaLucio.⁠

    Please, add your name to the petition at the link in bio, then tag three friends to do the same.⁠

    Image: Courtesy of the Lucio team

     


    Salvemos a Melissa

    Melissa Lucio, de ascendencia Mexicana, enfrentara su ejecución en Texas el 27 de abril de 2022 por el asesinato de su hija de dos años, Mariah— un crimen que nunca ocurrió. Mariah murió dos días después de caerse accidentalmente de unas escaleras empinadas. Melissa ha mantenido su inocencia condenada a pena de muerte durante más de 14 años.

    • Hashtag: #SalvemosAMelissa
    • URL: SalvemosMelissa.org
    • Enlace de petición aqui.
    • Twitter — volver a publicar aqui: Texas tiene programado ejecutar a Melissa Lucio el 27 de abril por un crimen que nunca ocurrió. Me uno a @innocence para prevenir una injusticia irreversible antes de que sea demasiado tarde #SalvemosAMelissa: https://bit.ly/3Gn2UqA
    • Facebook — volver a publicar aqui: Texas tiene programado ejecutar a Melissa Lucio el 27 de abril por un crimen que nunca ocurrió. Me uno a @innocence para prevenir una injusticia irreversible antes de que sea demasiado tarde: https://bit.ly/3Gn2Uq
    • Instagram
      • Volver a publicar aqui.
      • Descarga imagenes para Instagram y Instagram Stories aqui.
      • Descarga gráficas para Instagram y Instagram Stories aqui.

    Copia de Instagram:

    Pero Mariah no fue asesinada, murió trágicamente después de una caída accidental de unas escaleras empinadas. Melissa, como casi el 70% de mujeres exoneradas, ha sido condenada por un delito que nunca ocurrió (eventos que en realidad fueron accidentes, muertes por suicidio, o delitos fabricados). ⁠

    Melissa es una sobreviviente de abuso y violencia sexual que soporto toda su vida desde los 6 años. Su historial de abuso la hace especialmente vulnerable a tácticas coercitivas y confesiones falsas. La noche en que murió su hija menor, Melissa fue interrogada e intimidada durante cinco horas, hasta que finalmente dijo: “Supongo que lo hice,” para que los detectives pusieran fin al interrogatorio.⁠

    Melissa era la madre de 12 hijos cuando fue arrestada. También estaba embarazada de mellizos, a los cuales dio a luz en prisión y tuvo que dar en adopción. El estado de Texas no presentó evidencia física que estableciera que Melissa alguna vez abusó de Mariah o de alguno de sus hijos. De hecho, miles de páginas de registros de los Servicios de Protección Infantil demuestran que ella nunca fue violenta con ellos.⁠

    En menos de 80 días #SalvemosAMelissa.⁠

    Por favor, agrega tu nombre a la petición en el enlace de nuestra bio, luego etiqueta a tres amigos para que hagan lo mismo. Mande el mensaje SAVEMELISSA a 97016⁠.

    Imagen: Cortesía del equipo Lucio⁠.

    The post Social Media Toolkit: Stop The Execution of Melissa Lucio in Texas appeared first on Innocence Project.

    This post was originally published on Innocence Project.

  • Last year, Mexico was named the most dangerous country in the world for journalists, after Afghanistan. A recent wave of assassinations has sparked nationwide protest action, reports Tamara Pearson.

    This post was originally published on Green Left.

  • 2022 Sex and Power Index, which analyses gender representation across Britain’s top jobs, shows equality is still ‘decades off’

    Only two of the government briefings held at the height of the coronavirus pandemic were led by a female politician, and in both cases it was the home secretary, Priti Patel, a report into gender representation across the UK’s top jobs has shows.

    The 2022 Sex and Power Index, compiled by the Fawcett Society, a charity campaigning for women’s rights, showed equality is still “decades off”, as men continue to dominate the top ranks of law, politics and business.

    Continue reading…

    This post was originally published on Human rights | The Guardian.

  • In one of the world’s most dangerous regions for environmental and human rights activists, La Siguata offers a safe space for women suffering trauma as a result of their work

    A milky-white and sky-blue stone hangs from a red string around Ethels Correa’s neck, and every so often she rubs it between her fingers.

    “When I feel anger, I grab this stone and I begin to relax, because they taught me how to breathe, to relax the body and to relax the mind,” she says. “I carry it with me all the time.”

    Continue reading…

    This post was originally published on Human rights | The Guardian.